It started promisingly. When my agent told me about the job, I leapt at it. This was a rarely performed classic from one of the greats of Jacobean drama; there was a staggering cast and we would be playing at the Old Vic. The Old Vic is a theatre steeped in theatrical history, especially for classical productions. It housed the National Theatre for twelve years until the concrete structure on the South Bank had been built. Our production was the first to take over the Old Vic after its departure.
I was playing Zanche the Moor (later I would come to call her ‘Zanche the Less’), servant to Glenda Jackson’s Vittoria Corombona. I steal money from Vittoria and betray her brother Flamineo to my new lover and things go downhill from there. I was the black devil to her white. I regret to admit that I was ‘blacked up’ for this role, the second time I’d done so; ten years previously, I was Mammy Pleasant in
Mammy Pleasant’s accent wasn’t in my repertoire and rather than listen to a tape (the usual actor’s route), I decided to accost a West Indian lady in Leicester market. I went up to a friendly-looking woman at a vegetable stall and said ‘Excuse me.’ She looked up, ‘Yes?’
‘I’m an actress and I’m playing a West Indian part in the next play at the Mercury Theatre. Would you be kind enough to give me some lessons in your accent?’
She raised her eyebrows, ‘What accent?’
That was tricky. ‘Well,’ I said, ‘I want to sound Jamaican. Are you Jamaican?’
‘Yes, I am Jamaican.’
‘Would you let me bring the text to your house? It would just be an hour or so. I’ll pay you.’
‘Pay me for TALKING?! No. Just come.’ And I spent a couple of hours with her, learning to sound like a voodoo queen. The line that still rings through my head is: ‘I see spirits all around you.’
Back to
I’ve talked to other cast members about our experience. Not all hated it as I did. Tom Chadbon had a wonderful time; and it’s important for me to say so, because my own misery obscured my vision of the wider truth. Adam Godley, aged eleven, played Giovanni, the child prince. He shared the role with Jonathan Scott-Taylor (following Equity rules about child performers). It was his first job and he stole the notices. He remembers Patrick Magee giving him racing tips and treating him like a grown-up. He loved talking to the old stage doorkeeper and once missed an entrance because of it. Glenda fixed him with a steely glare: ‘Don’t worry, but don’t EVER do it again!’ He never did, and went on to become a distinguished actor, to be seen again on Broadway in